The current Sugababes lineup: Heidi Range, Amelle Berrabah and Jade Ewen
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Recommend? What makes a band? It’s a small question, but, in Mike’s Café in Portobello, the feelings it uncorks are anything but small. Ron Tom, the producer and songwriter behind the original lineup of Sugababes, is talking about the part he played in creating the band that, on Monday, releases its latest album. Sweet 7 is the seventh by Sugababes — although, since Keisha Buchanan was replaced by the former Eurovision entrant Jade Ewen last year, the line-up features no survivors from the one that released One Touch, their debut album, in 2001.

Tom may describe himself as “the Suga Daddy”, but the 47-year-old has, he says, been a mere spectator of the group’s latest line-up changes. “It’s a personal thing,” he says. “I’ve been working with Siobhán [Donaghy] and Mutya [Buena] since they were 9 and 11 respectively. Keisha and Mutya were best friends since they were 5 — I helped to put them through school. The three of them : that was the sound. Even after Siobhan was replaced by Heidi [Range] it still sounded like Sugababes.”

Tom’s sadness at what Sugababes have turned into seems to be shared by Buena. The singer, who left in 2006, recently wrote on Twitter: “It all started so innocently ... a love for music and a dream. Look what it’s become.” A legal firm representing her has since applied to the European Trademarks Authority for the right to use the Sugababes name.

If you thought that the personnel developments of the group known for hits such as Freak Like Me and Push the Button had become a little messy, an hour with Tom leaves you thinking that you might not have witnessed the half of it. With litigation over the ownership of the name pending, Tom — godfather to Buena’s child — chooses his words carefully.

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Sugababes were his brainchild, he says — a “younger, fresher” version of All Saints, whose original line-up he also put together. The sonic blueprint established by Sugababes’ debut single Overload yielded immediate results — a Top Five hit in 2000. Not least for the uncoached air of teenage testiness that seemed so refreshing in a post-Spice Girls world, critical acclaim chimed with commercial success.

Tom’s case appears to be strong in one sense. Two thirds of the most successful Sugababes line-up — the one that scored four No 1s between 2002 and 2005 — dates back to his period of involvement. If he is once again in dialogue with the three original singers of an imprint that he originated, could he — or Buena, whose application seems to have his blessing — really be denied the name?

If it sounds messy, says Leslie de Chernatony, “it’s because a name has powerful associations”. The honorary professor of brand marketing at Birmingham Business School, de Chernatony has a well-developed understanding of what is at stake here. A band name isn’t just a band name — it’s a brand. And a brand, de Chernatony says, “is nothing more than a cluster of functional and emotional values”.

The humbling news for Stereophonics, Dave Matthews, Dire Straits and every other self-styled sweat-of-my-honest- brow rock artisan is that “the functional values [the songs] can be replicated. Emotional value, however, is the bit that’s more difficult to copy.”

De Chernatony argues that too many changes in too short a time erode the emotional value. Find yourself invested in the ongoing narrative of a group who have lost a key member and you instinctively will them to rally. It happened with Pink Floyd following the departures of Syd Barrett and Roger Waters. Waters may have written and sung most of the songs, but he didn’t bank on the emotional clout of the Floyd brand. Could it also happen with Britain’s second-biggest female vocal group of the past decade? When we watch the current line-up of Sugababes singing Freak Like Me — a record that two of them had no part in making — will we care?

That said, to a certain sort of music fan it doesn’t matter who is in the band at all. The day Damon Albarn realised that was the case was the day that the possibility of cracking America — something that Blur never quite managed — became a possibility for Albarn’s animated group Gorillaz (12 million albums sold and a new one, Plastic Beach, just released). “There are 13-year-old Gorillaz fans who haven’t got the foggiest idea who Jamie [Hewlett, the visual arm of the project] and I are,” Albarn says. “The band is the band that you see in the videos and the artwork.You could have a Gorillaz show without Jamie and me.”

Just as you could have a Girls Aloud show without the production team responsible for all their hits? “Well yes. It’s about the sound, isn’t it? Within the general sound of Gorillaz a lot of things are possible — different vocalists, etc — and it still sounds like a Gorillaz song.”

On the seventh floor of the Grosvenor House hotel, Duke Fakir, of the Four Tops, tells a story about a visit his group made to Britain five years ago. “We were being interviewed on some show,” says Fakir, now 72, “and they had a viewer phone in to say that we were imposters — she had seen us a few weeks previously at a Spanish resort and there was no way we were the same group. We spent $100,000 (£66,000) taking the bogus group to court. It was money that we never got back, because they didn’t have it.”

Fakir might feel that bogus versions of his group “are taking food from our table”, but in 2010 he is the sole surviving member of the group who recorded Reach Out I’ll Be There, The Same Old Song and I Can’t Help Myself. When his group and the Temptations — who also boast only one original singer in Otis Williams — start their forthcoming joint British tour, will they be so different from the tribute groups making money from the goodwill accrued by their back catalogues? Fakir believes so. Furthermore, he sees Laurence Payton Jr — the son of a founding Four Tops singer — as the heir to the group’s legacy. He says his “dream” is to see it continue.

Seated beside him, Williams nods effusively. “I would equate the Temptations and the Four Tops with Kellogg’s or Coca-Cola. They’re great American brands, and you have a duty to make sure that people get a standard of quality that you would associate with that brand.”

Could this latest version of the Four Tops ever sound as magnificent as the one in which Levi Stubbs lit the emotional touch paper to the words of Eddie Holland? Perhaps not. So why is it OK by me for them to continue, when the continuation of Sugababes’ current line-up leaves me indifferent?

De Chernatony thinks that it might have something to do with the fact that we can stomach only a certain number of changes over a particular time-frame. “What you have seen with the Four Tops and the Temptations is a brand that has evolved, and the generation that grew up with them has maintained a relationship with them. It’s an amoeba that has changed its shape beautifully.”

Fifty years from now, will the authenticity of a fourth-generation Four Tops be an issue? If no one remembers the original Led Zeppelin, will a tribute version be deemed inferior to the real thing? The composer and pianist Stephen Hough points out that we don’t hold classical music to account in the same way. “In the time of Chopin composers and performers were one and the same. No one had a career just playing other people’s music. They gave concerts to showcase their own. But during the 19th century, as more and more music had been written down and more public concerts were taking place, things changed. In the early 20th century a reverse trend set in. Now few performers compose and vice versa.”

At the beginning of the 21st century a similar transition may be happening. Abba’s Björn Ulvaeus makes the salient if self-deprecating point that his group’s continuing appeal is predicated on “a memory people have of the Seventies that doesn’t correspond entirely to our music”. It’s this view that has informed Ulvaeus’s long-held insistence that anyone keen to see Abba in their prime would be better off going to see a tribute band.

As for Sugababes, with no one singer or songwriter binding together their different incarnations it’s unclear rwhat they stand for. But if their creator has his way, that may yet change. “This was never a manufactured act. We’re talking about three girls that grew up together,” Tom says with an air of finality. Be that as it may, the fact remains that each party has something that the other sorely needs. Two thirds of the most recognisable Sugababes are free to work together again. Does it follow, though, that they’ll get the name? Tom describes a reunion of the original line-up as “inevitable”. What might constitute an appropriate stage for the reunited Sugababes is another matter. At this rate, the courts look a likely bet.

The Four Tops, the Temptations, the Drifters and the Three Degrees tour from March 14-26 (www.ticketline.co.uk); Sweet 7 is released on Monday by Universal; Plastic Beach is out on Parlophone

The Sugababes singer enjoys jetting around the world but claims she can't find anywhere in other countries that makes her favourite hot drink as well as she can in her native Britain.

She tweeted: "Home sweet home with a nice cup of tea, it's the simple things you miss when you've been away."

Home sweet home with a nice cup of tea, it's the simple things you miss when you've been away.
Heidi has just returned from Azerbaijan where she and her bandmates - Amelle Berrabah and Jade Ewen - performed a private show.

The pop trio played at the exclusive Chinar Lounge, in the Middle Eastern country's capital city Baku, and treated revellers to eight tracks, including 'Round Round' and 'Get Sexy'.

Heidi, 26, loved her time in the country and took to her twitter page to tell her fans about experience.

She wrote: "Hey tweeters, in Azerbaijan with the girls. Lovely, lovely, friendly people."

Although their time in Azerbaijan was fantastic, the flight to the country didn't go so well.

The plane was caught in an electrical storm but after a severe bout of turbulence the journey went smoothly.

Taio Cruz's Break Your Heart gets 273,000 downloads in one week, giving it the biggest-ever jump for an act's first charting single.

Track the action song by song, mingle with fellow fans and keep current with Brian Mansfield's updates at our American Idol community.

ShareYahoo! Buzz Add to Mixx Facebook TwitterMore Fark Digg Reddit MySpace StumbleUpon Propeller LinkedInSubscribe myYahoo iGoogleMore Netvibes myAOLBy Steve Jones, USA TODAYWatching his club-friendly Break Your Heart skyrocket to the top of the pop charts is déjà vu for British singer/songwriter Taio Cruz.The song, which last week entered Billboard's Hot 100 at No. 53, made it to No. 1 after selling 273,000 downloads this week, according to Nielsen SoundScan. The jump was the biggest ever for an act's first charting single. Break Your Heart also spent three weeks as the top U.K. song last fall.

VIDEO: Watch Cruz's 'Break Your Heart' on YouTube

"It's had the same sort of movement where you were not seeing anything of it and then it jumped straight in and started going crazy," says Cruz (whose name is pronouncedTie-oh Cruise).

Sean Ross, radio-info.com's executive editor of music and programming, calls the song "a great, obvious radio single, and one more example of U.K. artists lending themselves well to the new rhythmic pop — the place where dance, hip-hop and pop meet — because they've always done a more pop distillation of R&B."

Cruz already is a star in Europe, having released two hit albums (2008's Departure and 2009's Rokstarr) and written songs for Ke$ha, Cheryl Cole, Justin Timberlake, Justin Bieber, Tinchy Stryder, Sugababes and others. He'd originally written Break Your Heart for Cole. The song, which warns a would-be lover not to fall for him, was just "an exaggeration of what I was feeling at the time."

"You write songs for different people and they don't always take them," Cruz says by phone from Los Angeles, where he's filming the video for next single Dirty Picture, featuring Ke$ha.

"Her record company just sat on it. We took it and I wrote some verses for it. We did a new version for the U.S., and called in (featured guest) Ludacris to do his thing."

Cruz, 26, says he expects Rokstarr to be released here in May. The U.K. version will be enhanced with some tracks from Departure and possibly a new track or two.

The London-based singer, son of a Nigerian father and Brazilian mother, owns the label Rokstarr Entertainment Division and plays piano, guitar, trombone, trumpet and drums. His music leans to electro-pop, infused with R&B, hip-hop and rock. The 2008 song She's Like a Star earned him a best U.K. male nomination for the British MOBO (Music of Black Origin) Awards.

Cruz just wrapped the first day of his video shoot — a series of club scenes — but he was looking forward to Day 2.

"We're going to get to drive a sports car in the desert," he says. "Now that's going to be fun."

SHE'S proved she has the moves, the legs and the attitude - and now JADE proves she has the voice. The former Eurovision star has showcased her talents on new SUGABABES record Sweet 7 - their first since KEISHA's controversial departure last year.

It is also their first album release since signing to JAY-Z's US label Roc Nation.

We've got our mitts on an exclusive listen to the entire album, which features chart-toppers Get Sexy, About A Girl and Wear My Kiss.

Speaking of the record, AMELLE said: "The sound just emerged for us.

"We wanted to make the album as Sugababes sounding as possible and wave the British flag at the same time, we've pushed ourselves and stepped it up.

"We're working with a new stylist this time round. Different image. Raunchy. Taking our clothes off basically!"

Bandmate HEIDI revealed having Jade "has been a breath of fresh air".

While Jade herself said the LP will "gauge whether I've finally been accepted as a Sugababe."

Sugababes tone down the raunch factor (just a little bit) as they perform private set in the Middle EastBy Chris JohnsonLast updated at 9:28 AM on 11th March 2010

It's safe to say the Sugababes have certainly vamped up their image since new member Jade Ewen joined the band.But last night the girls toned it down - if only slightly - as they performed a private gig in the largely Islamic country Azerbaijan.All three members poured their figures into LBDs, complete with higher necklines than we're used to seeing them in.

Here come the girls: Sugababes Amelle Berrabah, Heidi Range and Jade Ewen perform a private set at the Chinar Lounge in Baku, Azerbaijan, last night

However the same could not be said for their hemlines, with Amelle Berrabah, Heidi Range and Jade all flashing rather a lot of leg.The group looked stunning for the performance at the exclusive Chinar Lounge, located in the Middle Eastern country's capital city, Baku.They sang eight tracks, including Freak Like Me, Hole In The Head, Round Round and Get Sexy.While everything went well with the set, the girls' 5½ flight did not go so smoothly after their plane flew through an electrical storm, causing severe turbulence.

Good form: The girls were more conservative with higher-than-usual necklines but they still flashed a lot of leg in their short ensembles

But after landing safely, they still managed to raise their spirits enough to entertain their select audience before partying with guests after the gig.Azerbaijan is a secular country although 95 per cent of the population are Muslim.

• The Sugababes, who were joined by new member Jade in November after Keisha Buchanan's shock exit, were yesterday announced as the headline act for the Gaymers-sponsored Camden Crawl.

The chart-topping trio, whose latest single Wear My Kiss entered the charts at No.7 last month, will open the two-day gig at venues around London's Camden Town on May 1.

Lostprophets and We Are Scientists top the bill on the closing night on May 2.

Other acts lined up for the London stages include Mercury Music Prize winners Speech DeBelle and Ms Dynamite, I Blame Coco, Roots Manuva, New Young Pony Club and Gang Of Four.

About Me

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The Jade Ewen Story so far...

Jade Almarie Louise Ewen (born 24 January 1988) is an English singer, songwriter, actress and member of the Sugababes. Ewen began her singing career in the girl group Trinity Stone signed to Sony BMG in 2005, but they disbanded in 2007 with no album released. In 2009, she represented the UK at the 2009 Eurovision Song Contest performing the Andrew Lloyd Webber / Diane Warren penned "It's My Time" after winning the UK national selection. She achieved 5th place, cementing her as the most successful British Eurovision act since 2002. She replaced Keisha Buchanan in the Sugababes in September 2009, while at the time still signed to Polydor Records.

Ewen was born and brought up in Plaistow, London, to a Jamaican mother, Carol and a Scottish-Sicilian father, Trevor. Trevor is blind and partially deaf, while Carol is partially blind. Ewen was a carer to both her parents and two younger siblings, Shereen and Kiel.She received a scholarship to the Sylvia Young Theatre School. As a student at Sylvia, she appeared in The Bill, Casualty and Mr. Harvey Lights a Candle.Ewen also won the part of Nala in The Lion King at the West End at the age of twelve. Ewen appeared in the children's dance DVD, entitled How To Dance. She also featured briefly in the video for pop rock band Busted's "What I Go to School For".

Between 2003 and 2004 she appeared in the Australian series Out There. In 2005, Ewen became a member of the girl group Trinity Stone which was signed to Sony BMG. The group disbanded in 2007. She later recorded with rapper Kwamé, who was impressed with her work on MySpace. She released a digital single, "Got You" in 2008 under Kwame's Make Noise label. Ewen co-wrote the song "A Little Bit" for the girl group Booty Luv and also "Let Me Be Me" for Jessica Mauboy. In early 2009, Ewen acted in the first episode of the series, Myths.

In January 2009, Ewen was approached and participated in the UK national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest 2009. She was eventually selected to represent the UK with the song "It's My Time" composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber who accompanied her on piano onstage. Ewen was signed with Polydor Records in February and began working on her debut album. In May Ewen finished in fifth place, the highest placing for the United Kingdom since 2002.

In September 2009, it was announced that Ewen had joined the Sugababes as the replacement for Keisha Buchanan.While her second single, "My Man" had been released in the same week, promotional activities for the single were cancelled. Although the single still managed to reach #35 in the charts. In an interview with the BBC, Ewen confirmed her commitment to the Sugababes as her main priority and that her solo album was put on hold. "About a Girl" later debuted at number eight in the UK. Sweet 7 was released in early 2010 after multiple delays from late 2009, and charted at #14 on the UK albums chart. In late 2010 Jade was revealed as the new face of Miss Ultimo lingerie, modelling the lingerie fashion lines Autumn/Winter collection for 2010.

A Brief History of The Sugababes

Sugababes are an English pop girl group based in London, consisting of members Heidi Range, Amelle Berrabah and Jade Ewen. The Guinness Book of World Records have named the Sugababes as the most successful female act of the 21st century with six UK number one singles and eighteen UK top ten hits.

Sugababes were formed in 1998 by founding members Siobhán Donaghy, Mutya Buena and Keisha Buchanan. In 2001, after just one album and some initial success, Donaghy departed and the introduction of Range in the same year was met with the commercial success. The group survived a second line-up change in December 2005, when Buena left the band and was subsequently replaced by Berrabah. In September 2009, it was confirmed that after eleven years in the band, Buchanan was no longer part of the group and had been replaced by Jade Ewen.